The exhibit, which opened Jan. 24 and continues through March 31, features costumes created by Wilson and his staff for the series, an HBO drama set in post-Katrina New Orleans.

Other upcoming programming related to the exhibit are Ogden After Hours performances by Davis Rogan (March 14) and John Boutte (March 21).

In addition, a beading workshop is scheduled for 10 a.m. March 2. Wilson and others from the show’s design team will lead the workshop for adults and children age 5-17. (Children under age 10 must be accompanied by an adult.)

More recently, “Treme’s” Kim Dickens has been cast in “Second Sight,” a pilot for a potential CBS fall drama set to film in New Orleans in the next few weeks. Jason Lee (“My Name is Earl” and the Louisiana-shot “Memphis Beat”) will star in the prospective series, a psychological thriller about Ross Tanner, an NOPD detective “who is suddenly afflicted with an autoimmune virus that causes hallucinations reflective of his subconscious,” the trade publication The Hollywood Reporter said. “He discovers that catching the killer depends as much on insight as eyesight.”

Dickens, who plays chef Janette Desautel in “Treme,” will play Sammy Wilde, “a detective on Ross' team with an off-color sense of humor,” THR said. “She's a likable back-country cougar with a fondness for men and liquor -- a sharp-tongued free spirit with plenty of free time to follow her heart's desires.”

In addition, Steve Zahn, “Treme’s” Davis McAlary, has been cast in the ABC drama pilot “Influence.” “The provocative workplace ensemble centers on the complicated relationship between two brothers who head a unique agency designed to attack their clients' problems using the real science of human motivation and manipulation,” the Hollywood Reporter said.

Zahn will play one of the two brothers, “an unmedicated bipolar world-renowned expert in the fields of human behavior, psychology and motivation and a former professor whose academic career imploded when the university became aware he was having an affair with a 22-year-old undergraduate,” the trade reported.